Hugh Calkinswas an American lawyer and educator, who served as a member of the Harvard Corporation from 1968 to 1985... (wikipedia)
Very few doctors are willing to care for CFS patients because it is such a downer.
I think it's likely the search engine advertisers are more likely to mislead our clients, that's one of the reasons we first took them on.
At minute 43 you can see the patient's blood pressure drop suddenly from 125 down to 45 and their heart rate dropped from about 110 to 80, and the patient passed out.
There's no diagnostic test to establish the diagnosis, and there's no known treatment for this condition.
These are numbers we can hang our hats on and will help us when we discuss options using this procedure rather than drug therapy.
The case is about people trying to mislead our client population to commercial Web sites that they can't afford. Many of our clients, certainly not all of them, are particularly vulnerable to being misled and being subjected to scams.